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J Exp Biol ; 215(Pt 7): 1151-61, 2012 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22399660

ABSTRACT

If a hindleg of a locust slips during jumping, or misses its target during kicking, energy generated by the two extensor tibiae muscles is no longer expended in raising the body or striking a target. How, then, is the energy in a jump (4100-4800 µJ) or kick (1700 µJ) dissipated? A specialised buckling region found in the proximal hind-tibia where the bending moment is high, but not present in the other legs, buckled and allowed the distal part of the tibia to extend. In jumps when a hindleg slipped, it bent by a mean of 23±14 deg at a velocity of 13.4±9.5 deg ms(-1); in kicks that failed to contact a target it bent by 32±16 deg at a velocity of 32.9±9.5 deg ms(-1). It also buckled 8.5±4.0 deg at a rate of 0.063±0.005 deg ms(-1) when the tibia was prevented from flexing fully about the femur in preparation for both these movements. By experimentally buckling this region through 40 deg at velocities of 0.001-0.65 deg ms(-1), we showed that one hindleg could store about 870 µJ on bending, of which 210 µJ was dissipated back to the leg on release. A band of blue fluorescence was revealed at the buckling region under UV illumination that had the two key signatures of the elastic protein resilin. A group of campaniform sensilla 300 µm proximal to the buckling region responded to imposed buckling movements. The features of the buckling region show that it can act as a shock absorber as proposed previously when jumping and kicking movements go wrong.


Subject(s)
Energy Metabolism/physiology , Extremities/physiology , Grasshoppers/anatomy & histology , Grasshoppers/physiology , Insect Proteins/metabolism , Movement/physiology , Absorption/radiation effects , Animals , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Behavior, Animal/radiation effects , Energy Metabolism/radiation effects , Extremities/anatomy & histology , Extremities/radiation effects , Female , Grasshoppers/radiation effects , Male , Movement/radiation effects , Sensilla/physiology , Sensilla/radiation effects , Sensilla/ultrastructure , Tibia/anatomy & histology , Tibia/physiology , Tibia/radiation effects , Tibia/ultrastructure , Ultraviolet Rays
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